Netflix has released the first scenes from “The Irishman,” the Martin Scorsese movie due out this fall.

The film stars Oscar winners Robert De Niro, 75, as Camden native Frank “The Irishman” Sheeran and Al Pacino, 79, as Teamsters leader Jimmy Hoffa. The movie is based on the 2004 Charles Brandt book “I Heard You Paint Houses,” in which Sheeran tells Brandt that he was responsible for killing Hoffa, along with 24 other mob hits.

In the trailer, Pacino, De Niro and another co-star, Oscar winner Joe Pesci, are seen at various ages. Their faces were digitally manipulated to look younger for certain scenes. (De Niro also wore platform shoes to tower over Pacino, since Sheeran was 6 foot, 4 inches tall.)

Pesci, a Newark native, joins De Niro, his co-star in Scorsese’s “Goodfellas” and “Casino," to play Russell Bufalino, a Pennsylvania Mafia boss. Sheeran told Brandt that Bufalino ordered him to kill Hoffa.

Hoffa, former president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, disappeared from the parking lot of a Michigan restaurant in 1975, when he was 62, and was declared legally dead in 1982.

On Monday, the New York Film Festival announced “The Irishman" would open the festival with its world premiere on Sept. 27, sharing the first two photos from the movie, which featured De Niro, Pacino, Pesci and Romano. The film will be released in select theaters after that before coming to Netflix.

The first teaser for the film aired during the Oscars in February, but didn’t show any video from the film, only a short audio clip. A new two-minute teaser for the film starts with a phone ringing outside the Villa Di Roma restaurant in Philadelphia. The clip then flashes to Newark native Joe Pesci, 76, on the other end of the line.

Joe Pesci and Robert De Niro in "The Irishman."Niko Tavernise | Netflix

“Hi, my friend,” Pesci says. “I got that kid I was talkin to you about here. I’m gonna put him on the phone, let him talk to you, OK?”

“Hello,” says Pacino, as Hoffa.

“Yes,” says De Niro, as Sheeran.

“Hiya Frank, this is Jimmy Hoffa,” Pacino says. The clip then cuts to scenes of fanfare for Hoffa, the union leader: a crowd cheering.

Then we see gold rings. “Only three people in the world have one of these,” says Pesci, as Bufalino. “And only one of them is Irish.”

De Niro’s Hoffa walks into Umberto’s Clam House in Manhattan’s Little Italy. Then comes the title of Brandt’s book: “I heard you paint houses.” We see Hoffa shoot a man, presumably dead, after the man crashes through a glass door. This may be Brooklyn mobster Joseph “Crazy Joe” Gallo. Sheeran also took credit for killing Gallo, who died after being shot at Umberto’s in 1972.

Ray Romano, Al Pacino and Robert De Niro in "The Irishman."Niko Tavernise | Netflix

“Well, you know, there’s a situation going on now, Frank,” Pacino’s Hoffa says, over clips of men dumping taxi cabs into water and setting the cars ablaze. “Big business and the government, they’re trying to pull us down.”

“You might be demonstrating a failure to show appreciation,” Pesci’s Bufalino, pictured at an older age, tells an older Hoffa. In the mix, we get footage of what looks like President John F. Kennedy’s funeral, and Anna Paquin, who plays Sheeran’s daughter, Peggy Sheeran.